Bubba Wallace entered Sunday’s Brickyard 400 with no guarantee that he’d make it to the playoffs, battling a winless streak of 100 races. But somehow, he made the fuel last till the very end and kept a charging Kyle Larson at bay through a late rain delay and two overtimes to win the crown jewel race.
There are four races on the NASCAR calendar that can truly define a driver's career. One of them is the Brickyard 400, which has been held at the world famous Indianapolis Motor Speedway since 1994, barring a three-year hiatus from 2021-23.
After a strenuous five-week stretch packed with intense duels, full-contact clashes, and a Cinderella storyline, Ty Gibbs pocketed the $1 million prize as the winner of NASCAR’s inaugural In-Season Tournament.
Bubba Wallace captured a career-defining win in Sunday's NASCAR Cup Series Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and with the win, he has secured his place in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs with four races remaining until they begin.
Few drivers in the sport of racing can say they've been on the kind of heater that 19-year-old Connor Zilisch has been enjoying over the past nine races in Xfinity.
Bubba Wallace waited out a late delay and barely won on fuel to capture Sunday's 29th annual Brickyard 400 in the second overtime at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Ind.